9.7 KiB
title, category, layout, SPDX-License-Identifier
| title | category | layout | SPDX-License-Identifier |
|---|---|---|---|
| Boot Loader Interface | Booting | default | LGPL-2.1-or-later |
The Boot Loader Interface
systemd can interface with the boot loader to receive performance data and
other information, and pass control information. This is only supported on EFI
systems. Data is transferred between the boot loader and systemd in EFI
variables. All EFI variables use the vendor UUID
4a67b082-0a4c-41cf-b6c7-440b29bb8c4f.
-
The EFI Variable
LoaderTimeInitUSeccontains the timestamp in microseconds when the loader was initialized. This value is the time spent in the firmware for initialization, it is formatted as numeric, NUL-terminated, decimal string, in UTF-16. -
The EFI Variable
LoaderTimeExecUSeccontains the timestamp in microseconds when the loader finished its work and is about to execute the kernel. The time spent in the loader is the difference betweenLoaderTimeExecUSecandLoaderTimeInitUSec. This value is formatted the same way asLoaderTimeInitUSec. -
The EFI variable
LoaderDevicePartUUIDcontains the partition GUID of the ESP the boot loader was run from formatted as NUL-terminated UTF16 string, in normal GUID syntax. -
The EFI variable
LoaderConfigTimeoutcontains the boot menu timeout currently in use. It may be modified both by the boot loader and by the host. The value should be formatted as numeric, NUL-terminated, decimal string, in UTF-16. The time is specified in seconds. In addition some non-numeric string values are also accepted. A value ofmenu-forcewill disable the timeout and show the menu indefinitely. If set to0ormenu-hiddenthe default entry is booted immediately without showing a menu. Unless a value ofmenu-disabledis set, the boot loader should provide a way to interrupt this by for example listening for key presses for a brief moment before booting. -
Similarly, the EFI variable
LoaderConfigTimeoutOneShotcontains a boot menu timeout for a single following boot. It is set by the OS in order to request display of the boot menu on the following boot. When set overridesLoaderConfigTimeout. It is removed automatically after being read by the boot loader, to ensure it only takes effect a single time. This value is formatted the same way asLoaderConfigTimeout. If set to0the boot menu timeout is turned off, and the menu is shown indefinitely. -
The EFI variable
LoaderEntriesmay contain a series of boot loader entry identifiers, one after the other, each individually NUL terminated. This may be used to let the OS know which boot menu entries were discovered by the boot loader. A boot loader entry identifier should be a short, non-empty alphanumeric string (possibly containing-, too). The list should be in the order the entries are shown on screen during boot. See below regarding the recommended vocabulary for boot loader entry identifiers. -
The EFI variable
LoaderEntryDefaultcontains the default boot loader entry to use. It contains a NUL-terminated boot loader entry identifier. -
The EFI variable
LoaderEntrySysFailspecifies the boot loader entry to be used in case of a system failure. System failure (SysFail) boot entries can optionally modify the automatic selection order in the event of a failure, such as a boot firmware update failure with the failure status recorded in the EFI system table. If a system failure occurs andLoaderEntrySysFailis set, systemd-boot will use this boot entry, and store the actual SysFail reason in theLoaderSysFailReasonEFI variable. -
The EFI variable
LoaderSysFailReasoncontains the system failure reason. This variable is used in cooperation withLoaderEntrySysFailboot entry. If system failure doesn't occur,LoaderSysFailReasonis not set. -
Similarly, the EFI variable
LoaderEntryOneShotcontains the default boot loader entry to use for a single following boot. It is set by the OS in order to request booting into a specific menu entry on the following boot. When set overridesLoaderEntryDefault. It is removed automatically after being read by the boot loader, to ensure it only takes effect a single time. This value is formatted the same way asLoaderEntryDefault. -
The EFI variable
LoaderEntrySelectedcontains the boot loader entry identifier that was booted. It is set by the boot loader and read by the OS in order to identify which entry has been used for the current boot. -
The EFI variable
LoaderFeaturescontains a 64-bit unsigned integer with a number of flags bits that are set by the boot loader and passed to the OS and indicate the features the boot loader supports. Specifically, the following bits are defined:1 << 0→ The boot loader honoursLoaderConfigTimeoutwhen set.1 << 1→ The boot loader honoursLoaderConfigTimeoutOneShotwhen set.1 << 2→ The boot loader honoursLoaderEntryDefaultwhen set.1 << 3→ The boot loader honoursLoaderEntryOneShotwhen set.1 << 4→ The boot loader supports boot counting as described in Automatic Boot Assessment.1 << 5→ The boot loader supports looking for boot menu entries in the Extended Boot Loader Partition.1 << 6→ The boot loader supports passing a random seed to the OS.1 << 13→ The boot loader honoursmenu-disabledoption when set.
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The EFI variable
LoaderSystemTokencontains binary random data, persistently set by the OS installer. Boot loaders that support passing random seeds to the OS should use this data and combine it with the random seed file read from the ESP. By combining this random data with the random seed read off the disk before generating a seed to pass to the OS and a new seed to store in the ESP the boot loader can protect itself from situations where "golden" OS images that include a random seed are replicated and used on multiple systems. Since the EFI variable storage is usually independent (i.e. in physical NVRAM) of the ESP file system storage, and only the latter is part of "golden" OS images, this ensures that different systems still come up with different random seeds. Note that theLoaderSystemTokenis generally only written once, by the OS installer, and is usually not touched after that. -
The EFI variable
LoaderDeviceURLcontains the URL the boot loader was downloaded from, in UTF-16 format. Only set in case of network boots. -
The EFI variable
LoaderTpm2ActivePcrBankscontains a hexadecimal string representation of a bitmask with values defined by the TCG EFI Protocol Specification for TPM 2.0 as EFI_TCG2_BOOT_HASH_ALG_*. If no TPM2 support or no active banks were detected, will be set to0.
If LoaderTimeInitUSec and LoaderTimeExecUSec are set, systemd-analyze
will include them in its boot-time analysis. If LoaderDevicePartUUID is set,
systemd will mount the ESP that was used for the boot to /boot, but only if
that directory is empty, and only if no other file systems are mounted
there. The systemctl reboot --boot-loader-entry=… and systemctl reboot --boot-loader-menu=… commands rely on the LoaderFeatures ,
LoaderConfigTimeoutOneShot, LoaderEntries, LoaderEntryOneShot
variables.
Boot Loader Entry Identifiers
While boot loader entries may be named relatively freely, it's highly
recommended to follow the following rules when picking identifiers for the
entries, so that programs (and users) can derive basic context and meaning from
the identifiers as passed in LoaderEntries, LoaderEntryDefault,
LoaderEntryOneShot, LoaderEntrySelected, and possibly show nicely localized
names for them in UIs.
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When boot loader entries are defined through the Boot Loader Specification files, the identifier should be derived directly from the file name, but with the
.conf(Type #1 snippets) or.efi(Type #2 images) suffix removed. -
Entries automatically discovered by the boot loader (as opposed to being configured in configuration files) should generally have an identifier prefixed with
auto-. -
Boot menu entries referring to Microsoft Windows installations should either use the identifier
windowsor use thewindows-prefix for the identifier. If a menu entry is automatically discovered, it should be prefixed withauto-, see above (Example: this means an automatically discovered Windows installation might have the identifierauto-windowsorauto-windows-10or so.). -
Similarly, boot menu entries referring to Apple macOS installations should use the identifier
osxor one that is prefixed withosx-. If such an entry is automatically discovered by the boot loader useauto-osxas identifier, orauto-osx-as prefix for the identifier, see above. -
If a boot menu entry encapsulates the EFI shell program, it should use the identifier
efi-shell(or when automatically discovered:auto-efi-shell, see above). -
If a boot menu entry encapsulates a reboot into EFI firmware setup feature, it should use the identifier
reboot-to-firmware-setup(orauto-reboot-to-firmware-setupin case it is automatically discovered).
Links
Boot Loader Specification
Discoverable Partitions Specification
systemd-boot(7)
bootctl(1)
systemd-gpt-auto-generator(8)